LSM Newswire

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Shaw Theatre Festival Announces 2010 Principal Casting and Creative Teams

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Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, November 25, 2009 ’Ķ Artistic Director Jackie Maxwell announced today the principal casting and creative teams for the Shaw Theatre Festival’Äôs 2010 season. The season runs from April 1 to October 31 on the Festival’Äôs four Niagara-on-the-Lake stages and feature ten productions, as well as the popular reading series of contemporary Shavian writers.

Notes Maxwell: ’ÄúI am thrilled to announce the casting for our 2010 season as it showcases the growth of some of our wonderful young actors, revels in the depth of talent throughout the company, sees the welcome return of several treasured company members and provides some exciting new names to watch out for. Our creative teams feature the cream of Canadian design, partnered with a slate of directors, musical directors and choreographers who are already deeply immersed in creating the worlds you will see next season. A potent mix to give life to next season’Äôs provocative playbill.’Äù

FESTIVAL THEATRE

Jackie Maxwell directs Oscar Wilde’Äôs edgy exploration of politics and marriage, An Ideal Husband featuring Patrick Galligan as the husband in question, Sir Robert Chiltern, Catherine McGregor as his wife Gertrude, Steven Sutcliffe as the debonair and insightful Lord Goring and welcomes back Moya O’ÄôConnell as the devious Mrs. Cheveley. The cast also features Mary Haney, Lorne Kennedy and Marla McLean. Designed by Judith Bowden with lighting design by Kevin Lamotte and sound design and original music composed by John Gzowski.

The virtuosity of the Ensemble’Äôs female members is exhibited in The Women. Directed by Alisa Palmer, Clare Boothe Luce’Äôs wickedly sardonic peek into the boudoirs of the Manhattan elite features Jenny Young, as the jilted Mary Haines, and Deborah Hay, as her dubious best friend Sylvia Fowler, with Beryl Bain, Nicolˆ° Correia-Damude, Sharry Flett, Mary Haney, Laurie Paton, Jenny L Wright and Moya O’ÄôConnell. Returning to join this illustrious group is Shaw favourite Kelli Fox. Designed by William Schmuck with lighting design by Kevin Lamotte.

Directed by Morris Panych, the increasingly relevant The Doctor’Äôs Dilemma by the Festival’Äôs namesake, features Patrick Galligan as the conflicted doctor Sir Colenso Ridgeon, Krista Colosimo as the young and alluring Jennifer Dubedat, Michael Ball as the eminent psychiatrist Sir Patrick Cullen and Thom Marriott as Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington. Jonathan Gould, as Louis Dubedat, returns to The Shaw after a brief absence and Patrick McManus and Ric Reid are also featured in this typically surprising Shavian ’Äúdilemma’Äù. Set design by Ken MacDonald, costume design by Charlotte Dean and lighting design by Alan Brodie.

COURT HOUSE THEATRE

Jason Byrne directs Tom Murphy’Äôs adaptation of Anton Chekhov’Äôs The Cherry Orchard featuring Goldie Semple as the aristocratic Madame Ranyevskaya, Jim Mezon as her brother Leonid Gayev and Benedict Campbell as Yermolai Lopakhin, the harbinger of progress and the new merchant class. The cast also features Neil Barclay, Al Kozlik, Julie Martell, Mark Uhre and Robin Evan Willis and welcomes back Severn Thompson to the company. Designed by Peter Hartwell with lighting design by Kevin Lamotte.

Christopher Newton, Artistic Director Emeritus, directs this season’Äôs second Shavian offering, John Bull’Äôs Other Island. This delicious exploration of colonialism features Benedict Campbell as Tom Broadbent, the English businessman consumed by the romance of Ireland, Graeme Somerville as his lapsed Irish business partner Larry Doyle and Jim Mezon as defrocked priest Peter (Father) Keegan, with Guy Bannerman, Corrine Koslo, Thom Marriott, Patrick McManus and Severn Thompson. Designed by William Schmuck with lighting design by Louise Guinand.

Directed by Jackie Maxwell, Linda Griffiths’Äô sensual story of female liberation, Age of Arousal, features Donna Belleville as Mary Barfoot, an ex-suffragette who runs a typing school, and Jenny Young as Rhoda Nunn, a conflicted New Woman, with Sharry Flett, Kelli Fox, Gray Powell and newcomer Zarrin Darnell-Martin. Designed by Sue LePage with lighting design by Alan Brodie and movement by Valerie Moore.

ROYAL GEORGE THEATRE

Joseph Ziegler directs the Mary Chase, Pulitzer Prize-winning play Harvey featuring Peter Krantz as the genial, but misunderstood, Elwood P. Dowd, Corrine Koslo as his society-conscious sister Veta Simmons and, returning to the Shaw stage, Norman Browning as Dr Chumley, with Guy Bannerman, Gray Powell and Diana Donnelly, who also returns to The Shaw this season. Designed by Sue LePage with lighting design by Louise Guinand.

Directed by Associate Director Eda Holmes, the musical caper One Touch of Venus (music by Kurt Weill, lyrics by Ogden Nash and book by Ogden Nash and S.J. Perelman) features Robin Evan Willis as the goddess Venus, Kyle Blair as shy barber Rodney Hatch, Deborah Hay as the whip smart Molly Grant and Mark Uhre as wealthy art collector Whitelaw Savory, with Neil Barclay, Gabrielle Jones, Julie Martell and Jay Turvey. Musical direction by Ryan deSouza, choreography by Michael Lichtefeld, set design by Camellia Koo, costume design by Michael Gianfrancesco and lighting design by Bonnie Beecher.

Gina Wilkinson, who made her Festival directorial debut with the 2009 runaway hit Born Yesterday, returns to direct J.M. Barrie’Äôs shocking real time tale Half an Hour featuring Diana Donnelly as Lady Lillian Garson and Peter Krantz as Lord Garson, with Norman Browning, Peter Millard and Wendy Thatcher. Designed by Tyler Sainsbury with lighting design by Kirsten Watt.

STUDIO THEATRE

The Shaw’Äôs on-going look at contemporary Shavians continues with Caryl Churchill’Äôs no-holds barred satire of the 1980’Äôs stock exchange, Serious Money. Directed by Eda Holmes, this vintage Churchill features Marla McLean as Scilla Todd, Graeme Somerville as Corman, Ali Momen as Jake Todd and Ken James Stewart as Zackerman with Anthony Bekenn, Lisa Codrington, Nicola Correia-Damude, Lorne Kennedy, Laurie Paton, David Schurmann and Steven Sutcliffe. Designed by Peter Hartwell with lighting design by Kevin Lamotte.

Reading Series:

Each season, members of the Ensemble take part in staged readings of specially selected full-length works that illuminate and complement the plays of the current season.

August 15, 2010, 11 a.m. - The Gigli Concert, by Tom Murphy.

August 29, 2010, 11 a.m. - Trouble in Tahiti, by Leonard Bernstein.

September 19, 2010, 11 a.m. - Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde, by Moises Kaufman.

October 2, 2010, 11a.m. - After the Orchard, by Jason Sherman.

The Shaw Theatre Festival acknowledges the generous support from this season’Äôs Production Sponsors: Bell, CIBC, Lombard Insurance Company, Paradigm Capital Inc, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Producers Circle, Scotiabank Group and TD Canada Trust Music.

Tickets for the 2010 season went on sale to Shaw Theatre Festival Members on November 7. Sales to the general public begin January 11 by mail, fax or online and January 16 by phone or in person.

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